I quit Facebook and my life is better now

I don’t need to hear from all you people who never got on Facebook in the first place. I know you’re already smiling your smug smile. This story is not for you.

But hey, you people who are on Facebook way too much, let me tell you my story.

It’s pretty simple. I was like you, spending more time than I was comfortable with on Facebook. The truth is, I didn’t even go there on purpose. It was more like I’d find myself there, scrolling down in what can only be described as a fetid swamp of echo-chamber-y hyper partisan news, the same old disagreements about the same old topics. So many petitions.

I wasn’t happy but I didn’t really know how to control myself.

Then, something amazing happened. Facebook told me I’d need to change my password for some reason. Maybe someone had tried to log into my account? I’m not sure, I didn’t actually read their message. In any case, it meant that when went to the Facebook landing page, again without trying to, I’d find myself presented with a “choose a new password” menu.

And you know what I did? I simply refused to choose a new password.

Over the next week, I found myself on that page like maybe 10 times, or maybe 10 times a day, I’m not sure, it all happened very subconsciously. But I never chose a new password, and over time I stopped going there, and now I simply don’t go to Facebook, and I don’t miss it, and my life is better.

That’s not to say I don’t miss anything or anyone on Facebook. Sometimes I wonder how those friends are doing. Then I remember that they’re probably all still there, wondering how they got there.

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one recommendation I would make is, log in one last time and “Disable” your account. This preserves it so nobody else can squat on your name, but removes the ability of anyone else to tag, write on your wall, etc.

I still have my account, but haven’t logged in for months. The amount of time that has been liberated for me, and the amount of stress that I now go without, has made a world of difference! I still use the Messenger though, for convenience.

Free speech isn’t guaranteed. We’re only guaranteed the right to speak without the government preventing us from speaking. However, we are not guaranteed the right to say whatever we want to others without consequence. If a private group or entity does not want to hear or publicize your “speech” they have a right to block it. Also, if people don’t agree with something you say, they also have a right to tell you that. Your freedom of speech is enacted when you say whatever it is you want to say. There’s is enacted when they respond (including blocking you from saying it again).

I used a different ploy when I saw I was re-enabling my account back multiple times since Facebook has certain benefits you really want (chat, groups, etc). I took a few weeks to get any tangible benefit, but has saved a lot of time in the long run:

1. Unfollow every friend you dont need to know about (I went a step further and unfriended people I hadn’t even met and still were FB friends) and mark them as an acquaintance. This clears of three-quarters of your feed
2. Militantly use the option “stop showing stories from XYZ” for junk clickbait sites and news you don’t want to follow (option is available through top-right arrow on the post field). Have stopped getting worthless buzzfeed articles, game links, memes, etc. If you really want to keep a blank wall, you click the like button on posts you prefer seeing and use the “Hide post” option on absolutely everything on the wall; this way FB knows you prefer posts which you liked, and algorithmically hide everything else the next time.

This dramatically improved my Facebook experience overall, FB doesn’t feel like a junkyard now, I still get updates on my good friends’ lives and I still can participate in groups and use Messenger. I no longer spend more than 2 minutes a day on the site because I’m not able to, my news feed is almost blank.

I’m a non-smug non-Facebook user. By that I mean that I don’t quite dare to sign up, in case I end up spending too much time on it, but part of me wonders if I’m missing out on making contact with lots of people I haven’t been in touch with for years or even decades.

I’m like you gowers. I keep thinking I should sign up, because I was missing out. Cathy, you’ve now convinced me not to join. I’m very susceptible to internet blackholes, so this is probably for the best.

Quitting social media was one of the moments I can point to where my life became much happier and fulfilling. I wish there was a way to help my friends reach this point. I’ve tried, but you can only lead a horse to the water, you can’t force him to drink.

I signed up on Facebook a long time ago when some e-friends asked me to “like” a community page they created for criticizing Wikipedia. Was not real trusting of social media back then so used a pseudonym. I soon created a dozen or so community pages to sort out my various scholarly interests and most of my blog traffic still comes from those places and other groups I joined. I eventually discovered that I needed to create a separate page for political commentary, so as not to upset my friends and family still living behind the Cactus Curtain,

But I have just recently made a new rule not to go on Facebook until after noon, and that has done wonders for my productivity and overall well-being …

Tangential: I’ve often thought that the song The Sound of Silence was rather prophetic of the rise of social media (“people talking without speaking / people hearing without listening”) in general. Simon & Garfunkel sing it as if they saw the vision of what was to come, and The Disturbed sing it like one who realizes its fulfillment.

For similar reasons to yours I took a different path and recently removed all past and present friends, neighbors, coworkers, acquaintances, etc. and follow only my spouse now – since that was the reason I finally joined 2 years ago and suddenly the connections proliferated from there. Also removed all liked pages, interests, groups, brands and bands, etc. Its so much more quiet yet together we can still share videos of the pets should one of us miss out or swap articles without cluttering email. Did likewise with Instagram and Pinterest. Messed the FB algorithm up so bad it thinks I’m a recent joiner, welcomes me, prompting me to find friends. ‘Hi, you’re new here! Let’s find some friends!’ For some reason it reminds me a bit of the overly pleasant cheery door in HHGTTG

I only look at select people’s status updates, and not shares websites. Every single outrage in 2016 — every single one (yes, THAT one, too, whatever “that one” is for you) — was at best misreported, and at worst entirely false. Facebook has become an echo chamber of virtue signalers unwittingly embarrassing themselves. It’s to the point where I have to actively refrain from being intentionally offensive in the face of the idiocy. I do that by generally avoiding facebook.

Thanks for this story Cathy… we posted it to the Anti Facebook community on reddit, which keeps track of the privacy violations and psychological techniques employed by FB, as well as provides a supportive community for people quitting.

I’m still on FB because it’s the easiest way to keep in touch with all the people who have wandered off to parts not Boston. I’ve given up on trying to convince anyone of anything there, though. I’ve also taken it off my phone when it’s gotten stressful. Really, I don’t think it’s specifically FB because I’ve been many other places online where nasty echo chamber bs occurs. It’s just the most well known. I’ve avoided Reddit entirely because of the toxic atmosphere.

Good rule, but I don’t have a 93 year old grandmother, so I just never say anything at all on Facebook.

That, and the fact that Facebook is waaaaaaaay too much like high school (fake “friends”, cliques, “beautiful/popular people”, bragging, bullying, etc) Enough to give a person nightmares all over again.

Happy New Year y’all!
I read about Cathy in the L. A. Times and zoomed to my keyboard to bookmark this incredible mathbabe.
Should have expected to find a whole band of gentle-type radicals on a rantette about FB.
Good to know I’m not the only one who quit November 8.
FREEDOM!!! Isn’t it wonderful to be an independent thinker?
Social media is lowering the bar so fast.
(fifth grade teacher, here)
We’re suffocating and deluding ourselves with data.